Randi Harper is one of the women that Gamergaters love to hate the most. A software developer, she became Gamergate Public Enemy #4 — after the troika of Sarkeesian, Quinn, and Wu — when she developed a BlockBot that enabled Twitter users to easily shield themselves (insofar as this is possible) from possible Twitter harassment at the hands of Gamergaters and others of their ilk.
This little bit of software garnered her many months of vicious harassment herself, and ultimately a three-part smear series on Breitbart by Gamergate’s pet “journalist,” Milo Yiannopoulos.
Now one Gamergater is going after Harper’s Patreon supporters, using personal information taken from the crowdfunding site when it was hacked earlier this month.
After finding the names and addresses of Harper’s several hundred Patreon supporters in the leaked data, British blogger Sam Smith took it upon himself to “warn” these people of Harper’s alleged crimes against decency by sending a mass email to everyone he found on the list.
But to a lot of people — myself included — his supposedly friendly warning read more like a blackmail attempt.
One of the recipients of the email shared it with me yesterday. It starts off in a decidedly unfriendly manner:
I am the author of the major blog www.matthewhopkinsnews.com. I am sending you this email because your name appears in a list of people who donate to a Patreon operated by a person called Randi Harper. The list was confidential but has been hacked and placed online by unknown third parties. As a result of the leak you may be named, so please read this email carefully.
Smith — who goes by the name “Matthew Hopkins” online, styling himself as a sort of digital reincarnation of the original “Witchfinder General” — then lays out what he sees as Harper’s ethical failings, linking to Yiannopoulos’ three-part smear job as proof. Among Smith’s complaints:
Harper has … admitted to drug abuse, including attempting to smoke meth from a broken lightbulb. She also irresponsibly dyed her dog blue and accidentally allowed it to lick up her drugs.
Dyeing a dog blue may annoy the dog, but if done properly it will not harm it. And literally billions of human beings on our blue planet have used drugs at some point in their lives.
Now we come to the blackmaily bit, which Smith insists is not blackmaily at all:
You are supporting a person who is associated with some of the vilest imaginable extremism. …
As a responsible journalist, I can assure you I shall not be publishing the list. However, some of you may work in regulated roles with responsible access to information, vulnerable adults or children. There may be a lawful public interest in my contacting the relevant authorities (including an employer).
Smith went on to ask Harper’s supporters if they, personally, “endorse her extremist views” and if they felt “aggrieved at Ms Harper’s failure to safeguard your personal data.” (Never mind that it was Patreon’s job, not Harper’s, to protect the data on its servers.)
If Smith’s email was intended to rattle its recipients, it seems to have succeeded. The person who sent the email to me reported that “[i]t left me quite shaken and furious.”
If the email was intended to scare donors into abandoning Harper, it has apparently backfired in a big way. Indeed, Motherboard reports that, according to Harper,
Smith’s efforts has had the opposite effect: her backers have responded by doubling, and sometimes tripling their donations. Her campaign has jumped more than $1,300 a month in donations after the emails went out.
For his part, Smith insists, as he did in a post yesterday, that his email wasn’t intended to be threatening. He had simply
decided the ethical thing to do would be to warn the people concerned, reassuring them I would not release the data and also what might happen, as I thought the Patreon boilerplate warning insufficient.
That bit about there being “a lawful public interest in my contacting the relevant authorities (including an employer)?” That was
actually just boilerplate legal language related to UK law. Obviously I am analysing these supporters and in some limited circumstances I might be required to report things – for example if they were a risk to a child. As a person who may wish to enter a regulated profession, I would be expected to cooperate with the authorities. Far from being a blackmail demand it is just standardised ‘cover-yourself’ legal language.
I will have to consult with the monkey lawyers flying out of my butt on that one.
Some Gamergaters have insisted that Smith isn’t really one of them, which is a bit silly, considering that he is a regular on the KotakuInAction subreddit — one of Gamergate’s main hubs of activity — who happily posted a photo of himself hobnobbing with Yianopoulos at a #Gamergate meetup in London last April.
But it is worth noting that the overwhelming majority of those posting about Smith’s email blast on KotakuInAction since word of it got out earlier this week have been strongly critical, blasting it as the sort of thing that (in their mind) only evil anti-Gamergaters would do. (Never mind that they haven’t.)
Of course, Gamergaters (and the mythic “third party trolls” they like to talk about so often) have been doing far worse to Sarkeesian, Quinn, Wu, Harper and many others among Gamergate’s favorite villains for more than a year now.
Still, the reaction to Smith’s blackmail-that’s-not-really-blackmail-honest suggests that at least some Gamergaters have a few sickly shreds of decency still living deep inside them somewhere. I can only hope they can nurse their decency back to full health before they ruin the lives of more people in their attempt to rid the game world of anyone and everyone who disagrees with them.
And I hope Patreon brings the full force of its lawyers down on Smith.
Thanks for the well wishing. I’m perfectly safe, I don’t attend university and the only reason I realized nothing was up was because of the helicopter. Those inglorious asswipes at 4chan really need a comeuppance.
Nothing was up? What the hell?
#people whoshouldnotusetouchscreenphones
@tesforms
It came out yesterday that the cancer spread, and total biscuit is only expected to have 2 to 3 years left to live. There was a post on gamer gazhi wishing him to get better.
I was super disappointed with “sex signals” when I saw it as a freshman. It was pretty good most of the way through, but then they decided they wanted to close out the show with a big controversy to get people talking. So they run through a very detailed description of a hypothetical encounter and present it as an ambiguous “may or may not be rape” story for people to analyze and debate.
Their scenario was obviously and unambiguously rape. I was not impressed.
@Orion
That’s very different from the show I saw then. I’m guessing it really depends on who’s performing given the improv nature of it.
I’ll take believing an unreliable narrator for $1000, Alex.
Oh, so much fail in such a condensed drive-by post…
1: The linked article is solely about Gjonji and Quinn; it does not delve into GG’s actions, and so cannot be seen as exculpatory of their behavior.
2: In addition, even if we take the full force of Gjonji’s word as accurate, and thus accept the claim that Quinn is an abuser, this does not mean that she, herself, is not being abused, nor does it mean that those abusing her are not complete shits.
3: Gjonji’s piece, by the way, does include descriptions of abusive behavior, but it also includes a great deal of information that is irrelevant and even obscuring the abuse described, preferring to salivate over the alleged affairs. This suggests that Gjonji himself is not as concerned about abuse as he is about whether or not Quinn was ‘loyal’ to him–a common component of male entitlement.
4: The writer also fails to even hint at acknowledging that several of Gjonji’s statements (most blatantly, the claim that the affairs were motivated by a desire to curry favor and good reviews from her alleged partners) have been falsified. This doesn’t mean his entire account is false, but it’s certainly reasonable to retain some skepticism.
5: Further, even if we somehow were to accept the argument that it is acceptable to definitively abuse an alleged abuser, this would only apply to conduct pertaining to Quinn herself. GG’s concurrent campaigns against Sarkeesian and others makes it clear that GG doesn’t give a rat’s fucking ass about punishing abuse–it’s all about hurting, harassing and terrorizing women.
So yes, Allen, GG is “all bad”. It was bad at the start, it’s been bad all along, and it’s bad now. It’s bad on the surface, and bad at the core. And you, personally, Allen, are bad for trying to use bullshit drive-by posts like this one to claim otherwise. I can only pity your parents for their utter failure to bring a decent human being into the world, and for their sakes, I hope that someday you achieve some sort of self-awareness. In the meantime, the door to Fuckoffland is right over there, please see yourself out.
Oh, man, the day that news broke out – every British peep on the websites I lurk on were just taking that and running with it.
It’s really great to see some political scandal that isn’t American for once.
Kinda sad that I didn’t see any British peeps take the piss out of it here.
It was the ultimate internet scandal: Utterly ridiculous and disgusting, yet no one actually got hurt so you didn’t feel bad laughing about it, and it proved that British television is produced by actual time travelers.
It was a magical, magical night.
@ Katz
Is that a “Black Mirror” reference?
As to the incident anyway, I think the general attitude was it’s funny but so what? No one was harmed ( I’m presuming the pig was past caring) and we’ve all been stoned.
@Alan:
I think people who do that are too quick to dismiss the real story in it:
A person who was in this fratenity group broke the code of silence.
The fact that there’s such initiation/”wacky hijinks”/”boys are boys” to guarantee that things stay under the wraps is the real story.
http://www.robfahey.co.uk/blog/the-pm-the-pig-and-musings-on-power/
http://theleveller.org/2015/09/british-really-laughing/
@ skiriki
Yeah, but it’s not news. Secret societies doing daft initiations is a cliché. True, it’s perhaps more of a US thing. Skull & Bones isn’t much of a stretch to people familiar with the Greek system.
But some rugby societies have equally daft rituals. It’s a well known phenomenon that ritualistic initiations helps promote comradeship and loyalty. Hey, just look at what the biker gangs go through!
Yep! (For the uninitiated: NSFW.)
Don’t you mean squealed?
This will never stop being funny.
@katz:
😀
You’re right. 😀
@Alan:
I think in that case, perhaps it is time that people start to actually ponder what’s up with that, that perhaps it is something to actually worry about (such as that Bullington ritual — what, you seek a homeless person and right in front of them set fifty pound bill in fire, or that you deck up with your finest threads and then go have a party and trash the restaurant just because you can afford to pay for the damages, WTF is wrong with y’all, you sad sacks of shit want to lead the country), because what exactly that kind of thing says about those in power?
Denying money from the poor? Wrecking places because they can? Hello, hell no — that’s the worst sort of affluenza and lack of empathy that you do not want to see in leadership.
Perhaps people should start a revolution, y’know, on behalf of pigs everywhere. So that all animals are actually equal… I mean humans. Humans. < /sarcasm >
No, no it won’t.
Noooo! We can’t let the pigs have another revolution. I’ve never forgiven them for what they did to Boxer.
Just let that pig thing spread into the bay, that’s the last thing we need!
Haven’t seen this mentioned yet: there’s been an arrest related to that Laurier University threat:
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/kitchener-waterloo/wilfrid-laurier-university-lockdown-british-police-1.3276345
It’s a 22-year-old Londoner (as in UK, not Ontario).
I’m going to make a guess here. A young guy making threats against a university on another contintent probably doesn’t have anything personal against that institution, so is probably just doing it for the lulz. Which means there’s a good chance this is not the first time he’s done this.
That’s good that they’ve taken seriously. Would he be charged in the UK or charged in Canada and extradited? Paging Alan!
@ WWTH
He can certainly be charged over here. Our malicious communications laws are based on where the threat is produced, not where it’s aimed. Theres a whole host of offences that the alleged behaviour falls under.
We also have an extradition treaty with Canada so if they want him they’ll just need to apply.
For more about how we deal with this sort of thing you might find the information here interesting. In the end this chap successfully appealed his conviction but the background reading illustrates the law very well.
https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/twitter_joke_trial#incoming-396555
That was fast. It’s like I really paged you 🙂
I thought all the women on here had magic powers 🙂
http://www.themarysue.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/Nose.gif
http://www.kimsminiatures.net/artistry/generated/E58G763MEOP70DO_ScaleWithin_600x600+noup.jpg